I came across this video on youtube and it did make me think. Can this be true? whats your thoughts on this?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-yFtzDigVc
Scroggsy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-yFtzDigVc
Scroggsy
He said tissue samples.didnt he say they were leaf samples? i am wondering...considering fan leaves store that kind of stuff, if maybe it isnt the opposite? that his end result wasnt because the plant didnt need it, but because it used much more of it then potassium or nitrogen? hmmm?
the only problem is that thats not cannabishhhmmm...wouldnt this guy be a pissed off grower to know that all the hard work testing MJ tissue was basically useless...
this is whats up: http://ipm.ncsu.edu/scouting_fraser_fir/sampling_soil.html
Where to take soil samples. Take soil cores from around 10 to 15 trees per acre. If plant tissue samples are taken, take soil cores from around the same trees. Take four cores per tree, varying the position of the core between the row, middles, and dripline.
Mix all cores from all locations in a bucket before placing a single sample in the soil sample box. Boxes and forms can be obtained from your local county center of the North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service.
When to take plant tissue samples. Tissue samples provide information on more nutrients than the soil samples. Comparing the soil samples with the plant tissue sample can show if the tree is taking up the nutrients. Take the first tissue sample when the trees have been in the field for 3 years. Take a second tissue sample when the trees are a year from market to help fine-tune fertility recommendations and to make certain that color and needle retention will be good at harvest.
Additional tissue samples should be taken to help diagnose the cause of color problems or poor growth in trees any time through the rotation or any time through the year. When diagnosing growth problems, always take two plant tissue samples -- one from the problem trees and a separate sample from good growing trees in the same block.
Time of year to take plant tissue samples. Tissue samples taken when the trees are dormant reflect nutrient levels most accurately. Nutrient levels in actively
growing tissue may vary considerably from the established standards. Therefore, avoid sampling from bud break until bud set. Samples taken during the active growth period should only be used for problem trees, and the results should be compared to samples taken at the same time from healthy trees.
How to take plant tissue samples. Sample from the same trees you have taken soil samples from. Plant tissue samples without a current soil sample are worthless. It is usually best to take samples from trees that are average in growth rather than from the best or the worst looking trees.
Take two shoots from the most current growth. Samples should be from the upper third of the tree. Try to sample shoots from a uniform position on branches such as a branch terminal. The laboratory will need at least 40 inches of growth to run their tests.
Local county extension agents can give you more information on taking soil and plant tissue samples and help you determine fertilizer needs from sample results. Your county agent can also help you take samples to diagnose problems where trees are not growing well.
that wasnt his point he said excess phosphorous will give your buds a harsher smoke, so if ur plant doesnt need it, y give it to it,thats like me making my own vicodin without as much opiate in it, and saying o well...the human bod's opiate receptors dont really use all the opiate in the pill, so im just not going to add as much from now on...what happens? it then goes from a high level pain killer...to a tylenol.
I do agree that doing chromatography tests without correlating it with soil tests and using a wide variety of different nutrients to determine which ions/cations most effectively deliver the phosphorous to the plant is somewhat of a waste of time, I would like to see some people to more indepth studies on what our girls need. and I would like to point out that most nute companies arent performing or at least arent sharing their scientific knowledge, at least this guys is educating usevery1 has there methods if u want to continue what ur doing so be it , thats ur thing, but i liked the video and appreciated the knowledged i gained from it, growing is about refineing ur methods to become a better grower alltogether and thats what this info is gonna help me do, if ur happy where ur at, so be it